Tutorial

How To Set Up Let's Encrypt with Nginx Server Blocks on Ubuntu 16.04

Updated on October 27, 2017

staff technical writer

How To Set Up Let's Encrypt with Nginx Server Blocks on Ubuntu 16.04

Introduction

Let’s Encrypt is a Certificate Authority (CA) that provides an easy way to obtain and install free TLS/SSL certificates, thereby enabling encrypted HTTPS on web servers. It simplifies the process by providing a software client, Certbot, that attempts to automate most (if not all) of the required steps. Currently, the entire process of obtaining and installing a certificate is fully automated on both Apache and Nginx.

In this tutorial, you will use Certbot to obtain a free SSL certificate for Nginx on Ubuntu 16.04 and set up your certificate to renew automatically.

This tutorial will use a separate Nginx server block file instead of the default file. We recommend creating new Nginx server block files for each domain because it helps to avoid some common mistakes and maintains the default files as a fallback configuration as intended. If you want to set up SSL using the default server block, you can follow this Nginx + Let’s Encrypt tutorial instead.

Prerequisites

To follow this tutorial, you will need:

  • One Ubuntu 16.04 server set up by following this initial server setup for Ubuntu 16.04 tutorial, including a sudo non-root user and a firewall.

  • A fully registered domain name. This tutorial will use example.com throughout. You can purchase a domain name on Namecheap, get one for free on Freenom, or use the domain registrar of your choice.

  • Both of the following DNS records set up for your server. You can follow this hostname tutorial for details on how to add them.

    • An A record with example.com pointing to your server’s public IP address.
    • An A record with www.example.com pointing to your server’s public IP address.
  • Nginx installed by following How To Install Nginx on Ubuntu 16.04.

  • A separate Nginx server block file for your domain, set up by following this Nginx server blocks tutorial for Ubuntu 16.04. This tutorial will use /etc/nginx/sites-available/example.com.

Step 1 — Installing Certbot

The first step to using Let’s Encrypt to obtain an SSL certificate is to install the Certbot software on your server.

Certbot is in very active development, so the Certbot packages provided by Ubuntu tend to be outdated. However, the Certbot developers maintain a Ubuntu software repository with up-to-date versions, so we’ll use that repository instead.

First, add the repository.

  1. sudo add-apt-repository ppa:certbot/certbot

You’ll need to press ENTER to accept. Then, update the package list to pick up the new repository’s package information.

  1. sudo apt-get update

And finally, install Certbot’s Nginx package with apt-get.

  1. sudo apt-get install python-certbot-nginx

Certbot is now ready to use, but in order for it to configure SSL for Nginx, we need to verify some of Nginx’s configuration.

Step 2 — Confirming Nginx’s Configuration

Certbot needs to be able to find the correct server block in your Nginx configuration for it to be able to automatically configure SSL. Specifically, it does this by looking for a server_name directive that matches the domain you request a certificate for.

If you followed the prerequisite tutorial on Nginx server blocks, you should have a server block for your domain at /etc/nginx/sites-available/example.com with the server_name directive already set appropriately.

To check, open the server block file for your domain using nano or your favorite text editor.

  1. sudo nano /etc/nginx/sites-available/example.com

Find the existing server_name line. It should look like this:

/etc/nginx/sites-available/example.com
. . .
server_name example.com www.example.com;
. . .

If it does, you can exit your editor and move on to the next step.

If it doesn’t, update it to match. Then save the file, quit your editor, and verify the syntax of your configuration edits.

  1. sudo nginx -t

If you get an error, reopen the server block file and check for any typos or missing characters. Once your configuration file’s syntax is correct, reload Nginx to load the new configuration.

  1. sudo systemctl reload nginx

Certbot can now find the correct server block and update it.

Next, we’ll update our firewall to allow HTTPS traffic.

Step 3 — Allowing HTTPS Through the Firewall

If you have the ufw firewall enabled, as recommended by the prerequisite guides, you’ll need to adjust the settings to allow for HTTPS traffic. Luckily, Nginx registers a few profiles with ufw upon installation.

You can see the current setting by typing:

  1. sudo ufw status

It will probably look like this, meaning that only HTTP traffic is allowed to the web server:

Output
Status: active To Action From -- ------ ---- OpenSSH ALLOW Anywhere Nginx HTTP ALLOW Anywhere OpenSSH (v6) ALLOW Anywhere (v6) Nginx HTTP (v6) ALLOW Anywhere (v6)

To additionally let in HTTPS traffic, we can allow the Nginx Full profile and then delete the redundant Nginx HTTP profile allowance:

  1. sudo ufw allow 'Nginx Full'
  2. sudo ufw delete allow 'Nginx HTTP'

Your status should look like this now:

  1. sudo ufw status
Output
Status: active To Action From -- ------ ---- OpenSSH ALLOW Anywhere Nginx Full ALLOW Anywhere OpenSSH (v6) ALLOW Anywhere (v6) Nginx Full (v6) ALLOW Anywhere (v6)

We’re now ready to run Certbot and fetch our certificates.

Step 4 — Obtaining an SSL Certificate

Certbot provides a variety of ways to obtain SSL certificates, through various plugins. The Nginx plugin will take care of reconfiguring Nginx and reloading the config whenever necessary:

  1. sudo certbot --nginx -d example.com -d www.example.com

This runs certbot with the --nginx plugin, using -d to specify the names we’d like the certificate to be valid for.

If this is your first time running certbot, you will be prompted to enter an email address and agree to the terms of service. After doing so, certbot will communicate with the Let’s Encrypt server, then run a challenge to verify that you control the domain you’re requesting a certificate for.

If that’s successful, certbot will ask how you’d like to configure your HTTPS settings.

Output
Please choose whether or not to redirect HTTP traffic to HTTPS, removing HTTP access. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1: No redirect - Make no further changes to the webserver configuration. 2: Redirect - Make all requests redirect to secure HTTPS access. Choose this for new sites, or if you're confident your site works on HTTPS. You can undo this change by editing your web server's configuration. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Select the appropriate number [1-2] then [enter] (press 'c' to cancel):

Select your choice then hit ENTER. The configuration will be updated, and Nginx will reload to pick up the new settings. certbot will wrap up with a message telling you the process was successful and where your certificates are stored:

Output
IMPORTANT NOTES: - Congratulations! Your certificate and chain have been saved at /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/fullchain.pem. Your cert will expire on 2017-10-23. To obtain a new or tweaked version of this certificate in the future, simply run certbot again with the "certonly" option. To non-interactively renew *all* of your certificates, run "certbot renew" - Your account credentials have been saved in your Certbot configuration directory at /etc/letsencrypt. You should make a secure backup of this folder now. This configuration directory will also contain certificates and private keys obtained by Certbot so making regular backups of this folder is ideal. - If you like Certbot, please consider supporting our work by: Donating to ISRG / Let's Encrypt: https://letsencrypt.org/donate Donating to EFF: https://eff.org/donate-le

Your certificates are downloaded, installed, and loaded. Try reloading your website using https:// and notice your browser’s security indicator. It should indicate that the site is properly secured, usually with a green lock icon. If you test your server using the SSL Labs Server Test, it will get an A grade.

Let’s finish by testing the renewal process.

Step 5 — Verifying Certbot Auto-Renewal

Let’s Encrypt’s certificates are only valid for ninety days. This is to encourage users to automate their certificate renewal process. The certbot package we installed takes care of this for us by adding a renew script to /etc/cron.d. This script runs twice a day and will automatically renew any certificate that’s within thirty days of expiration.

To test the renewal process, you can do a dry run with certbot:

  1. sudo certbot renew --dry-run

If you see no errors, you’re all set. When necessary, Certbot will renew your certificates and reload Nginx to pick up the changes. If the automated renewal process ever fails, Let’s Encrypt will send a message to the email you specified, warning you when your certificate is about to expire.

Conclusion

In this tutorial, you installed the Let’s Encrypt client certbot, downloaded SSL certificates for your domain, configured Nginx to use these certificates, and set up automatic certificate renewal. If you have further questions about using Certbot, their documentation is a good place to start.

Thanks for learning with the DigitalOcean Community. Check out our offerings for compute, storage, networking, and managed databases.

Learn more about our products

About the authors
Default avatar

staff technical writer

hi! i write do.co/docs now, but i used to be the senior tech editor publishing tutorials here in the community.

Still looking for an answer?

Ask a questionSearch for more help

Was this helpful?
 
10 Comments
Leave a comment...

This textbox defaults to using Markdown to format your answer.

You can type !ref in this text area to quickly search our full set of tutorials, documentation & marketplace offerings and insert the link!

Great Tutorial! Really easy to follow.

In regards to Updating Diffie-Hellman Parameters, I noticed that the certbot automatically adds in an entry to the serverblock

ssl_dhparam /etc/letsencrypt/ssl-dhparams.pem

should I remove this?

Hazel Virdó
DigitalOcean Employee
DigitalOcean Employee badge
October 27, 2017

Good catch! It looks like Certbot has since fixed the weak DH parameters: https://github.com/certbot/certbot/issues/374

You won’t need to create your own at all now, and a fresh setup will get an A on the SSL Labs Server Test without any additional configuration.

Thanks for pointing this out! I’ve updated the tutorial accordingly.

Thank you so much for taking the time to write this tutorial! So complete!

Really nice, direct, simple, and uncomplicated tutorial. Worked for me in about 4 minutes from beginning to end. If you’ve followed other DO guides for setting up nginx this goes much faster.

sudo certbot --nginx -d example.com -d www.example.com

After running the above command I get the following error:

Failed authorization procedure. www.example.com (tls-sni-01): urn:acme:error:tls :: The server experienced a TLS error during domain verification :: remote error: tls: handshake failure

Hazel Virdó
DigitalOcean Employee
DigitalOcean Employee badge
November 6, 2017

If your website is behind a CDN (like CloudFlare) or reverse proxy, the TLS-SNI-01 challenge method won’t work. If so, you can try using webroot mode instead: https://letsencrypt.readthedocs.io/en/latest/using.html#webroot

Thanks @hazelnut, tried it after disabling Cloudflare and it works fine.

Very helpful tutorial!

I am still using Ubuntu 14.04, and this command doesn’t work for that system: sudo systemctl reload nginx

I had to restart this way: sudo service nginx restart

Otherwise, did pretty much everything else exactly as is. And boom! Thank you.

Hazel Virdó
DigitalOcean Employee
DigitalOcean Employee badge
November 9, 2017

So glad the tutorial was helpful!

The reason why systemctl doesn’t work is because it’s a systemd command. Ubuntu 14.04 uses Upstart as its init system, but Ubuntu 16.04 switched to systemd.

If you want to learn a bit more, we have a few tutorials that might be interesting:

Just a heads up, but certbot is now an untrusted Ubuntu repository.

@peterdcarter I’m not sure how to act on that information. Did this recently happen? I poked around but couldn’t find anything helpful. That would be annoying, just thought I’d learned something new and useful…

Hi Hazel, thanks so much for this tutorial. I have a question. if I have more than one server block in my nginx droplet and each one has a different domain name, can I obtein separate ssl certificate per domain just doing the same process here per server block and domain?

for example, it would be:

certbot --nginx -d domain1.com -d www.domain1.com
certbot --nginx -d domain2.com -d www.domain2.com

and so on…

I just want to be sure that I will go over the right way…

Thanks in advance for your help!

Hazel Virdó
DigitalOcean Employee
DigitalOcean Employee badge
November 20, 2017

You’ve got it! To get multiple certificates for multiple domains, you’ll need to run certbot multiple times. You can get one certificate for multiple domains by specifying more domains in a single command using the -d flag.

Just make sure you have server_name set correctly in each of your server blocks and that your domains all have the appropriate A records.

If you want to be extra sure you’re in the clear, check that your version of Nginx has SNI support, but it should by default as long as it’s a vaguely recent version.

Works perfect, very easy to follow. Slightly off topic but I can’t access my website via www. Any reason why?

Hazel Virdó
DigitalOcean Employee
DigitalOcean Employee badge
November 21, 2017

I’d double check that you have an A record set up for www and also that the server_name directive in your Nginx configuration file includes the www domain.

Dam you quick, will double check. thank you

For some reasons when I run the following command:

sudo certbot --nginx -d example.com -d www.example.com 

Everything works fine, except that Certbot cannot access my server block:

Could not open file: /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/example.com

I configured my server block exactly has explain on the tutorial linked in the pre-requisites.

Any idea where this could come from?

Hazel Virdó
DigitalOcean Employee
DigitalOcean Employee badge
November 30, 2017

Hmm, that’s odd, especially if you followed the prerequisites; I do the same thing when testing an article before publication to make sure everything works exactly as written.

I would double check the permissions and ownership on the file, then check that the symlink is set up correctly. You can also look at the logs in /var/log/letsencrypt for more clues.

If that doesn’t help, try asking in our Q&A section. Include your configuration file and log output to make it easier for others to help you.

Let me know if you fix it!

Thank you for your help, I check what you said but to no help. I created a question on the Q&A: https://www.digitalocean.com/community/questions/certbot-nginx-plugin-could-not-open-file

The command: sudo ufw status Only show me the port but dont the name of Nginx HTTP or similar.

Try DigitalOcean for free

Click below to sign up and get $200 of credit to try our products over 60 days!

Sign up

Join the Tech Talk
Success! Thank you! Please check your email for further details.

Please complete your information!

Become a contributor for community

Get paid to write technical tutorials and select a tech-focused charity to receive a matching donation.

DigitalOcean Documentation

Full documentation for every DigitalOcean product.

Resources for startups and SMBs

The Wave has everything you need to know about building a business, from raising funding to marketing your product.

Get our newsletter

Stay up to date by signing up for DigitalOcean’s Infrastructure as a Newsletter.

New accounts only. By submitting your email you agree to our Privacy Policy

The developer cloud

Scale up as you grow — whether you're running one virtual machine or ten thousand.

Get started for free

Sign up and get $200 in credit for your first 60 days with DigitalOcean.*

*This promotional offer applies to new accounts only.